Liquefied coal releases 40 percent more carbon dioxide than oil when burned, said Ken Caldeira, a scientist at the Carnegie Institution of Washington.
Not exact matches
According to Adriana Gonzales of the Sierra Club, an uncovered five - story pile of
coal ash situated next to a low - income and minority community in the town of Guayama threatens to toxify the entire area thanks to its content of heavy metals like arsenic, mercury, and chromium that will be
released when the rain
liquefies the ash.
«Using and
liquefying coal is an available technology, but under current conditions, there would be a great deal of CO2
released from making liquids out of
coal.